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Ten Debts That Follow You After Bankruptcy

By Cathy Moran

debts after bankruptcy

debts after bankruptcy

Some debts just follow you out of bankruptcy.

Not many but a few.

These debts continue to be collectible even after a Chapter 7 discharge.  The discharge in Chapter 13 is different and broader:  just another reason to choose Chapter 13.

1.   Family support

Regardless of what it’s called, court ordered payments for support of children or spouses

2.   Recent taxes

Income taxes for tax years  more than three years old, counting from when the return was due

3.   Taxes still assessable

The IRS ability to assess additional tax survives if the tax year was still assessable at filing

4.   Taxes for unfiled years

The clock doesn’t run on tax discharge until an honest return is filed.

5.   Payroll taxes

The trust portion of payroll taxes, federal and state:  that’s what the employer withholds from employee checks

6.   Judgments for drunk driving

Liability for death or personal injury from impaired operation of a vehicle

7.   Debts to spouse or child from divorce

Debts to your own lawyer do get wiped out

8.   Student loans

Unless you file suit in the bankruptcy and prove repayment is an undue hardship

9.   Money borrowed to pay non dischargeable tax

No paying taxes with a loan you want to discharge.

10.  Penalties to governments

This covers fines, penalties and forfeitures that are intended to punish not compensate

Non dischargeable if….

Three additional categories of debts survive bankruptcy only if the affected creditor successfully jumps through some legal hoops in the bankruptcy case.

Debts incurred by fraud; debts for conversion or breach of fiduciary duty; and debts for deliberate injury to person or property require the victim to file suit and prove the operative facts.

There’s a short period for filing a non dischargeability action and the presumptions operate in favor of the debtor.  But if the creditor can establish the bad behavior of the debtor that created the debt, public policy says we don’t want to shelter bad actors.

It’s important to understand that the debt must have been incurred by the bad behavior;  just trying to evade payment of an honestly incurred debt doesn’t make it non dischargeable, in most instances.

Liens survive unless…

How to get rid of liens through bankruptcy

While a bankruptcy discharge wipes out your personal liability for discharged debts, a lien on property you owned when you filed bankruptcy continues to be liable for the debt.  So you aren’t liable but your property can be seized to pay the debt.

Think of your home loan:  your discharge keeps the lender from suing you after bankruptcy for a money judgment, but it doesn’t keep the lender from foreclosing on your house if you don’t pay after bankruptcy..

After bankruptcy, as long as you continue to pay on a secured debt, the creditor is generally happy to take your money and leave you alone.  If you change your mind, or further financial troubles loom, you can walk away from the liened property, losing only the property.

An experienced bankruptcy lawyer can walk you through the bankruptcy discharge and the landscape after your case is over.

More

Interview questions for hiring a bankruptcy lawyer

What to do about tax liens

Reaffirming a car debt

 

Filed Under: Consumer Rights, Life after bankruptcy Tagged With: 2017, debts after bankruptcy

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About The Soapbox

You've arrived at the Bankruptcy Soapbox, a resource of bankruptcy information and consumer law.

Soapbox is a companion site to Bankruptcy in Brief, where I try to be largely explanatory and even handed (Note I said "try").

Here, I allow myself to tell stories and express strong opinions on how I think law should work for the consumer and small businesses when it comes to debt.

Moran Law Group
Bankruptcy specialists for individuals and small businesses in the San Francisco Bay Area

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